A new study is out that claims atheist physicians are more likely than
those of a religious persuasion to hasten the deaths of patients.
From the story:
Terminally-ill patients would be well advised to
find out the religious beliefs of their doctor, according to research
showing the effect of faith on a doctor’s willingness to make decisions
that could hasten death. Doctors who are atheist or agnostic are twice
as likely to take decisions that might shorten the life of somebody who
is terminally ill as doctors who are deeply religious – and doctors
with strong religious convictions are less likely even to discuss such
decisions with the patient, according to Professor Clive Seale, from
the centre for health sciences at Barts and the London school of
medicine and dentistry…
The chances of a doctor making an ethically
controversial decision expected or partly intended to end life was
largely unrelated to the doctor’s ethnicity, but was strongly related
to his or her specialisation. Specialised doctors in hospitals were
almost 10 times as likely to report this than palliative care
specialists.
Well, that takes a little unpacking. Patients or surrogates should
always be in the loop on medical treatment or withdrawal decisions:
Doctors should not “decide” to end life-sustaining treatment that is
biologically efficacious–and of course, they should never kill.
Similarly, they should not decide to force unwanted treatment on
patients–either through omission or commission–who would rather let
nature take its course.
My take: I have noticed in the assisted suicide debate that many
proponents are atheist or Unitarian. But that certainly isn’t a
universal. Religious people also support hastening death and
unilaterally terminating treatment based on quality of life
judgmentalism, while many atheists (such as Nat Hentoff) and clear
secularists, oppose hastening death either through imposition of futile
care theory, health care rationing, or participating in direct actions
to kill.
I think it would be offensive in the extreme to ask a physician about
his or her religious beliefs. They are quite irrelevant and none
of the patient’s business. I don’t care if a physician is a
Christian, Hindu, Jewish, Buddhist, Muslim, or secularist. What
matters is that he or she accept human exceptionalism and adheres to
the Hippocratic tradition of valuing each individual patient equally,
giving each optimal care, and never participating in the intentional
taking of human life. Unfortunately, these days, those are
questions that can no longer be taken for granted and hence, they are
issues about which wise patients will inquire.
Contact: Wesley J. Smith